After "an extremely non-hostile meeting" with the store owner, the owner promised to stop selling the item, Walid told the Free Press. But Thompson Target -- the Ohio-based manufacturer of the life-sized target called "Crazy Bones" -- appears less willing to give in to Walid's pleas.

“I had a spirited conversation with a family member of the owner,” Walid told the paper. “He told me we’re at war and we were trying to kill Osama bin Laden. I told him there are people here who may dress that way and they aren’t like Osama bin Laden."

But whatever Thompson Target decides to do, Target Sports has itself proved open to the concerns of its community. Just this past week, the store agreed to make a change to their rental policy at their shooting range after two people committed suicide and one person deliberately shot himself in the last five months, both using guns rented at the store's shooting range.

At the Royal Oak City Commission meeting on Feb. 6, Police Chief Corrigan O'Donohue explained that the store's policy now states that they won't rent a gun to anyone that comes in by themselves if they don't already have a gun in their possession, as "every one of the suicides or attempts involved an individual coming in by themself without a gun."